Sharp v. Bedell

10 Ill. 88
CourtIllinois Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 15, 1848
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 10 Ill. 88 (Sharp v. Bedell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Illinois Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sharp v. Bedell, 10 Ill. 88 (Ill. 1848).

Opinion

The Opinion of the Court was delivered by

Trumbull, J.

This was an action of debt brought against Cyril Call, Chester Loveland, Chauncy Loveland, and Edward A. Bedell, upon an appeal bond. Bedell was alone served with process.

The declaration, after setting forth the making of the bond, &c. in the usual form, alleges that it was subject to a condition, “that if the said Chester Loveland and Cyril Call should pay and satisfy whatever judgment might be rendered by the Circuit Court of Hancock county, upon the dismissal or trial of a certain appeal to the said Circuit Court taken by them from a judgment rendered by George Rockwell, Esq., a justice of the peace, within and for said county, on the 15th day of February 1845, where Fidelio C. Sharp was plaintiff, and Chester Loveland and Cyril Call were defendants, for the sum of ninety six dollars, debt, and six dollars and seventeen cents, costs of suit, in favor of the said plaintiff and against the said defendants, then said obligation was to be void, otherwise to remain in full force and virtue.”

The declaration then alleges that after said appeal was taken, an order was made by the Circuit Court of Hancock county, whereby the venue in said cause was changed to the county of McDonough; and that at the May term, 1847, of the Circuit Court of McDonough county, upon a trial of said cause, the judgment of the justice of the peace was affirmed for the sum of ninety six dollars and costs. The breach assigned is the non-payment of this judgment. The defendant, Bedell, filed a general demurrer to this declaration, which was sustained by the Court, and judgment rendered against the plaintiff for costs.

The sufficiency of the declaration is the only question for our consideration, and this depends upon the construction to be put upon thé condition of the bond as therein set forth. It is admitted that the declaration shows no breach of the condition of the bond in terms, as,the defendant never undertook in so many words, to pay any other judgment than such as might be rendered by the Circuit Court of Hancock county; but then it is insisted, that inasmuch as the law intends appeal bonds for the security of the appellee in case his judgment is affirmed, and inasrimch as the law authorizes changes of venue, the language used in the condition of the bond is to receive such a construction as will effectuate the legislative intention, which never could have been to allow the obligors upon an appeal bond to escape respon-. sibility, by procuring a change of venue from the Court to which the appeal was taken. In other words, it is insisted that the law in reference to changes of venue, entered into and became part of the contract, in the same manner as if it had been incorporated into the condition of the bond, and the defendant had obligated himself, in so many words, to pay whatever judgment might be rendered upon the dismissal or trial of said appeal, either by the Circuit Court of Hancock county or of any other county, to which the case might be taken by change of venue.

This would undoubtedly be the case, were the suit brought upon a bond conditioned as the law requires, but he who would call upon the Court to give such a construction to an obligation as will effectuate the legislative intention, must first show, on his part, an obligation in accordance substantially at least with the legislative intention. The plaintiff in this case does not show such an obligation. The condition of appeal bonds as prescribed by the statute, after setting forth that whereas a judgment has been recovered, an appeal taken, &c., is as follows, to wit: “Now if the said-shall prosecute his appeal with effect, and shall pay whatever judgment shall be rendered by the Court upon dismissal or trial of said appeal, then the above obligation to be void, otherwise to remain in full force and effect.”

Had the bond declared upon been conditioned according: to the statute, the case would have been free from difficulty, and neither a loose construction nor the aid of other statutes would have been invoked to authorize a recovery upon the bond. The declaration,.however, describes a bond essentially variant in its conditions from the one required by statute. It differs, first, by wholly omitting the condition, to prosecute the appeal with effect, and secondly, the obligors instead of binding themselves generally to pay whatever judgment might be rendered by the Court, upon dismissal or trial of the appeal, have limited their liability to the payment of such judgment as might be rendered by a particular Court, to wit, the Circuit Court of Hancock county. We may well suppose that in prescribing the form of the condition of appeal bonds, the Legislature may have had in view the possibility of changes of venue, and therefore used the words “the Court” which would apply to any Court to which the cause might be taken, instead of the words the “said Court,” or the Circuit Court of a particular county.

Several cases have been referred to by the plaintiff in error, which are supposed to be analogous to the present, but the one most relied upon is that of Watts v. Waddle, 6 Peters, 389, which, however, is clearly distinguishable from the present. That was a suit in Chancery for the specific performance of a contract to convey by warranty deed certain tracts of land, so soon as a final decree should be rendered by the United States’ Circuit Court for the District of Ohio, in a suit there pending in said Court, the object of which Was to vest the legal title in the vendor, so that he might be able to convey a perfect title to his vendee. The bill was filed in 1826. A final decree from which an appeal had been taken, was obtained in the Circuit Court in 1818, and it was insisted .that it was the duty of the vendor, at that time, to have executed the conveyance. The Court say: “In the contract there was a reference to the final decree of the Circuit Court, but as the decision of that Court was not final in the case, and as an appeal was actually taken, by some of the defendants to the1 Supreme Court, it may reasonably be inferred that this contingency was within the calculation of both parties at the time of the contract. * * There can be no difficulty in coming to the conclusion that both parties referred to a final decision of the case; and to such a decree as should vest the legal title in Watts,” who was the vendor; and the Court held that there was no negligence imputable to Watts till such a final decree was obtained in the Supreme Court, though for other reasons a specific execution of the contract was refused.

We have no fault to find either with the decision or the reasoning of the Court in the case of Watts. The question was, whether Watts had been guilty of such negligence as to prevent the relief he was then seeking. It was a mere question of time, which in Equity is not usually material, and as the object of delaying the execution of the conveyance until the final decision of the Circuit Court, was to enable Watts to obtain the legal title, so as to be able to execute a conveyance in compliance with his contract and the understanding of the parties, it is manifest, that the object was . not attained by a decree which was rendered nugatory by appeal, and was not, therefore, final according to the terms of the contract. Moreover, the rules of construction adopted by Courts of Equity in construing contracts and carrying into effect the intentions of parties, are widely different from those which prevail in Courts of Law in reference to the liabilities of securities.

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Bluebook (online)
10 Ill. 88, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sharp-v-bedell-ill-1848.